Has anyone noticed ads have made you worse at reading?
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I keep noticing that in non ad cluttered UIs and searches my eyes automatically go to the secondary information sometimes making me miss the primary information.
Someone will say “click on “name” element” and I’ll search for it but miss it even though it’s the most “eye catching” thing. Or I find I open the link a few down from the top one even if it’s not sponsored.
The mental filter to find good information hiding in a sea of dominant splashy advertisements has resulted in a reduction in my performance in processing well meaning eye catching designs meant to guide me to useful information.
Has anyone else experienced this?
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I keep noticing that in non ad cluttered UIs and searches my eyes automatically go to the secondary information sometimes making me miss the primary information.
Someone will say “click on “name” element” and I’ll search for it but miss it even though it’s the most “eye catching” thing. Or I find I open the link a few down from the top one even if it’s not sponsored.
The mental filter to find good information hiding in a sea of dominant splashy advertisements has resulted in a reduction in my performance in processing well meaning eye catching designs meant to guide me to useful information.
Has anyone else experienced this?
I never thought about this being caused by ads, but, maybe.
It goes beyond reading too. When I worked retail, we had a saying, "when you can't find something, it's right in front of you." We would just look over the item we were searching for because we were looking everywhere but directly in front of us
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I keep noticing that in non ad cluttered UIs and searches my eyes automatically go to the secondary information sometimes making me miss the primary information.
Someone will say “click on “name” element” and I’ll search for it but miss it even though it’s the most “eye catching” thing. Or I find I open the link a few down from the top one even if it’s not sponsored.
The mental filter to find good information hiding in a sea of dominant splashy advertisements has resulted in a reduction in my performance in processing well meaning eye catching designs meant to guide me to useful information.
Has anyone else experienced this?
nah i stil reed reel gud n stuff
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I keep noticing that in non ad cluttered UIs and searches my eyes automatically go to the secondary information sometimes making me miss the primary information.
Someone will say “click on “name” element” and I’ll search for it but miss it even though it’s the most “eye catching” thing. Or I find I open the link a few down from the top one even if it’s not sponsored.
The mental filter to find good information hiding in a sea of dominant splashy advertisements has resulted in a reduction in my performance in processing well meaning eye catching designs meant to guide me to useful information.
Has anyone else experienced this?
Nope. I've successfully avoided most digital ads my entire life thus far. Block 'em all. Plus I don't watch Shorts etc on any platform current day or long defunct apps in the past.
I read a ton still, and on paper for the majority of that. Guest room is full of book shelves. Some digital through epub / Moon+ Reader paid version of the app which... removes ads, haha. Not that I'd see them with TrackerControl installed, but the screen space waste blank ad bar would remain.
Stuff out of my control offline is it and it's just annoying instead of detrimental. The gas station pumps adding obnoxious screens is the most infuriating new thing so far. I show up to movies later to miss the pre-rolls which is easy now with assigned seats.
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Nope. I've successfully avoided most digital ads my entire life thus far. Block 'em all. Plus I don't watch Shorts etc on any platform current day or long defunct apps in the past.
I read a ton still, and on paper for the majority of that. Guest room is full of book shelves. Some digital through epub / Moon+ Reader paid version of the app which... removes ads, haha. Not that I'd see them with TrackerControl installed, but the screen space waste blank ad bar would remain.
Stuff out of my control offline is it and it's just annoying instead of detrimental. The gas station pumps adding obnoxious screens is the most infuriating new thing so far. I show up to movies later to miss the pre-rolls which is easy now with assigned seats.
if you can get something long and slender and relatively strong you can usually destroy the speaker.
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I keep noticing that in non ad cluttered UIs and searches my eyes automatically go to the secondary information sometimes making me miss the primary information.
Someone will say “click on “name” element” and I’ll search for it but miss it even though it’s the most “eye catching” thing. Or I find I open the link a few down from the top one even if it’s not sponsored.
The mental filter to find good information hiding in a sea of dominant splashy advertisements has resulted in a reduction in my performance in processing well meaning eye catching designs meant to guide me to useful information.
Has anyone else experienced this?
I find online formats have shrunk my attention span. I don't think I've experienced what you describe, however.
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I keep noticing that in non ad cluttered UIs and searches my eyes automatically go to the secondary information sometimes making me miss the primary information.
Someone will say “click on “name” element” and I’ll search for it but miss it even though it’s the most “eye catching” thing. Or I find I open the link a few down from the top one even if it’s not sponsored.
The mental filter to find good information hiding in a sea of dominant splashy advertisements has resulted in a reduction in my performance in processing well meaning eye catching designs meant to guide me to useful information.
Has anyone else experienced this?
I can't remember the last time I saw an ad on the internet, but then again I zealously block them in every way I can.
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I keep noticing that in non ad cluttered UIs and searches my eyes automatically go to the secondary information sometimes making me miss the primary information.
Someone will say “click on “name” element” and I’ll search for it but miss it even though it’s the most “eye catching” thing. Or I find I open the link a few down from the top one even if it’s not sponsored.
The mental filter to find good information hiding in a sea of dominant splashy advertisements has resulted in a reduction in my performance in processing well meaning eye catching designs meant to guide me to useful information.
Has anyone else experienced this?
my best friends dad growing up was an advertisement executive... he gave me a lot of insight to advertising and advertisment...
basically you have to understand the game so you can block it, and once you understand the rules it won't get to you and you won't notice it .. unless it's marketing art and then you see it
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Nope. I've successfully avoided most digital ads my entire life thus far. Block 'em all. Plus I don't watch Shorts etc on any platform current day or long defunct apps in the past.
I read a ton still, and on paper for the majority of that. Guest room is full of book shelves. Some digital through epub / Moon+ Reader paid version of the app which... removes ads, haha. Not that I'd see them with TrackerControl installed, but the screen space waste blank ad bar would remain.
Stuff out of my control offline is it and it's just annoying instead of detrimental. The gas station pumps adding obnoxious screens is the most infuriating new thing so far. I show up to movies later to miss the pre-rolls which is easy now with assigned seats.
Thanks for mentioning TrackerControl, it is a true game changer!
Been looking for such an app for years! 🤍 -
I keep noticing that in non ad cluttered UIs and searches my eyes automatically go to the secondary information sometimes making me miss the primary information.
Someone will say “click on “name” element” and I’ll search for it but miss it even though it’s the most “eye catching” thing. Or I find I open the link a few down from the top one even if it’s not sponsored.
The mental filter to find good information hiding in a sea of dominant splashy advertisements has resulted in a reduction in my performance in processing well meaning eye catching designs meant to guide me to useful information.
Has anyone else experienced this?
what are a d s? so confused
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Thanks for mentioning TrackerControl, it is a true game changer!
Been looking for such an app for years! 🤍I've just installed it and suddenly Komoot has started behaving itself. Isn't that interesting.
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I keep noticing that in non ad cluttered UIs and searches my eyes automatically go to the secondary information sometimes making me miss the primary information.
Someone will say “click on “name” element” and I’ll search for it but miss it even though it’s the most “eye catching” thing. Or I find I open the link a few down from the top one even if it’s not sponsored.
The mental filter to find good information hiding in a sea of dominant splashy advertisements has resulted in a reduction in my performance in processing well meaning eye catching designs meant to guide me to useful information.
Has anyone else experienced this?
Had the same thing with youtube videos, my brain filters out eye-catching thumbnails
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I never thought about this being caused by ads, but, maybe.
It goes beyond reading too. When I worked retail, we had a saying, "when you can't find something, it's right in front of you." We would just look over the item we were searching for because we were looking everywhere but directly in front of us
wrote last edited by [email protected]I lost my hairbrush, couldn't find it, gave up and used a comb. Three days later, It was right there on my nightstand.
I also lost my keys once for five days, (I had a spare set thankfully). They were on top of a cabinet.
All the damn time. It's "funny" but honestly, so frustrating I'm like this. If I can't find something, best to just wait, it'll appear eventually.
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I can't remember the last time I saw an ad on the internet, but then again I zealously block them in every way I can.
Yeah I don't even start reading or watching until the ads are gone.
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I lost my hairbrush, couldn't find it, gave up and used a comb. Three days later, It was right there on my nightstand.
I also lost my keys once for five days, (I had a spare set thankfully). They were on top of a cabinet.
All the damn time. It's "funny" but honestly, so frustrating I'm like this. If I can't find something, best to just wait, it'll appear eventually.
I often joke to my wife: "I can't find X anywhere! Give me something else to start looking for so I can find them!"
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Thanks for mentioning TrackerControl, it is a true game changer!
Been looking for such an app for years! 🤍Link broken
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Link broken
Works for me...
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Nope. I've successfully avoided most digital ads my entire life thus far. Block 'em all. Plus I don't watch Shorts etc on any platform current day or long defunct apps in the past.
I read a ton still, and on paper for the majority of that. Guest room is full of book shelves. Some digital through epub / Moon+ Reader paid version of the app which... removes ads, haha. Not that I'd see them with TrackerControl installed, but the screen space waste blank ad bar would remain.
Stuff out of my control offline is it and it's just annoying instead of detrimental. The gas station pumps adding obnoxious screens is the most infuriating new thing so far. I show up to movies later to miss the pre-rolls which is easy now with assigned seats.
Thats awesome. Aspiring to be you.
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I keep noticing that in non ad cluttered UIs and searches my eyes automatically go to the secondary information sometimes making me miss the primary information.
Someone will say “click on “name” element” and I’ll search for it but miss it even though it’s the most “eye catching” thing. Or I find I open the link a few down from the top one even if it’s not sponsored.
The mental filter to find good information hiding in a sea of dominant splashy advertisements has resulted in a reduction in my performance in processing well meaning eye catching designs meant to guide me to useful information.
Has anyone else experienced this?
Why are you seeing ads online?
I use arch btw.
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I keep noticing that in non ad cluttered UIs and searches my eyes automatically go to the secondary information sometimes making me miss the primary information.
Someone will say “click on “name” element” and I’ll search for it but miss it even though it’s the most “eye catching” thing. Or I find I open the link a few down from the top one even if it’s not sponsored.
The mental filter to find good information hiding in a sea of dominant splashy advertisements has resulted in a reduction in my performance in processing well meaning eye catching designs meant to guide me to useful information.
Has anyone else experienced this?
wrote last edited by [email protected]Can't relate; I blocked ads on every PC, phone, and TV I own over 15 years ago now and haven't looked back. Don't know why anyone would voluntarily put up with ads when there are oh so many ways to easily block them.